Slippery self-lubricating polymer surfaces

US9963597B2 · US · B2

Patent metadata
FieldValue
Publication numberUS-9963597-B2
Application numberUS-201314414291-A
CountryUS
Kind codeB2
Filing dateJul 12, 2013
Priority dateJul 12, 2012
Publication dateMay 8, 2018
Grant dateMay 8, 2018

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  1. Title

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  2. Abstract

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  3. Assignees and inventors

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  4. Key dates

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  5. First independent claim

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  6. CPC / IPC classifications

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  7. Citations and related patents

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Abstract

Official abstract text for this publication.

The present disclosure describes a strategy to create self-healing, slippery self-lubricating polymers. Lubricating liquids with affinities to polymers can be utilized to get absorbed within the polymer and form a lubricant layer (of the lubricating liquid) on the polymer. The lubricant layer can repel a wide range of materials, including simple and complex fluids (water, hydrocarbons, crude oil and bodily fluids), restore liquid-repellency after physical damage, and resist ice, microorganisms and insects adhesion. Some exemplary applications where self-lubricating polymers will be useful include energy-efficient, friction-reduction fluid handling and transportation, medical devices, anti-icing, optical sensing, and as self-cleaning, and anti-fouling materials operating in extreme environments.

First claim

Opening claim text (preview).

What is claimed is: 1. An article having a slippery surface to repel target materials, the article comprising: a substrate comprising a polymer having the general formula PxSy, where P is a covalently crosslinked polymer and S is a supramolecular block within the polymer, wherein x+y=1 and “y” is greater than 0 and less than or equal to 1, wherein the supramolecular blocks are held together by noncovalent interactions between the monomer repeat units of the supramolecular block, wherein the noncovalent interactions comprise (1) host-guest interaction between receptor-donor systems, choice of said host-guest interactions including complex of cyclodextrin with hydrophobic guest molecules, cucurbiturils with aromatic molecules, crown ethers with ionic compounds, (2) physical crosslinking between domains formed by microphase separation, choice of said microphase separation including self-assembly of block copolymers, partial molecular fold structures, π-π stacking domains, and crystalline domains; (3) noncovalent bonds between additives, choice of said additives including microparticles, nanoparticles, clay, graphene, and other inorganic additives; (4) hydrogen bonding, choice of said hydrogen bonding including hydrogen bonds formed between urea groups; (5) ionic bonding, choice of said ionic bonding including bonds between amino and carboxylic acid groups; (6) coordination interaction, choice of said coordination interaction including metal-ligand coordination; (7) entangled structures, choice of said entangled structures including entanglements formed between groups that include rotaxanes and sliding rings; or (8) combinations thereof; a lubricating liquid infused within and over the polymer and wherein the polymer and the lubricating liquid have an affinity for each other such that the infused lubricating liquid is absorbed within at least a part of the polymer to form a lubricating liquid-infused polymer while a remainder of the lubricating liquid extends from the swollen layer and forms an overlayer of the lubricating liquid, on and above a surface of the swollen layer wherein the lubricating liquid is immiscible with the target materials and wherein the lubricating liquid has an affinity with the polymer to maintain and replenish the overlayer by providing the lubricating liquid from said swollen layer to preserve the overlayer throughout operational life of the article. 2. The article of claim 1 , wherein the polymer P comprises an elastomer. 3. The article of claim 1 , wherein the polymer P comprises silicone elastomers. 4. The article of claim 3 , wherein the lubricating liquid further comprises silicone oil. 5. The article of claim 1 , wherein the polymer P comprises fluorosilicone elastomers. 6. The article of claim 1 , wherein the lubricant comprises a perfluorocarbon, a fluoroether, a fluorocarbon, a perfluorinated hydrocarbon, a fluorosilicone, a perfluoropolyether, a perfluoroalkylamine, a perfluoroalkylsulfide, a perfluoralkylsulfoxide, a perfluoroalkylether, a perfluorocycloether, a perfluoroalkylphosphine, a perfluoroalkyly phosphineoxide, a long-chain perfluorinated carboxylic acid, a fluorinated phosphonic acid, a fluorinated sulfonic acid, and/or a fluorinated silane. 7. The article of claim 1 , wherein the polymer P comprises petroleum-based polymers. 8. The article of claim 7 , wherein the lubricating liquid comprises hydrocarbons. 9. The article of claim 1 , wherein the wt./wt. ratio of the polymer and the lubricating liquid ranges from 10:1 to 1:10. 10. The article of claim 1 , wherein the wt./wt. ratio of the polymer and the lubricating liquid ranges from 4:1 to 1:4. 11. The article of claim 1 , wherein the wt./wt. ratio of the polymer and the lubricating liquid ranges from 2:1 to 1:2. 12. The article of claim 1 , wherein the lubricating liquid-infused polymer comprises an excess of lubricating liquid and the excess lubricating liquid is localized in lubricating liquid-rich domains within the polymer. 13. The article of claim 1 , wherein the lubricating liquid is present in an amount sufficient to provide a reservoir of lubricating liquid. 14. The article of claim 1 , wherein the lubricating liquid comprises two or more lubricating liquids. 15. The article of claim 14 , wherein a first lubricating liquid has a lower viscosity than a second lubricating liquid and the second lubricating liquid has a lower vapor pressure than the first lubricating liquid. 16. The article of claim 1 , wherein the lubricating liquid is non-toxic. 17. The article of claim 1 , wherein the target material is a biological material. 18. The article of claim 1 , wherein the article comprises a roughened surface. 19. The article of claim 18 , wherein the slippery lubricating layer forms a conformal layer with the roughened surface. 20. The article of claim 18 , wherein the slippery lubricating layer forms flat layer over the roughened surface coating said roughened surface. 21. The article of claim 1 , wherein the swollen polymer of the article contains a fluidic network and is combined with a further fluidic network adjacent to the swollen polymer such that the swollen polymer and its lubricant liquid overlayer can be infused with additional lubricating liquid to further replenish the slippery lubricating layer on the surface. 22. The article of claim 21 , wherein the polymer comprising a fluidic network is a pipe or a container liner that covers the inner or outer surface of said pipe or container. 23. The article of claim 1 , in which the surface comprises a coating layer on the article. 24. The article of claim 23 , wherein the coating layer comprises two or more layers of liquid swollen lubricating liquid-infused polymer. 25. The article of claim 24 , wherein layers of the two or more layers of lubricating liquid-infused polymer have different compositions and one of the layers is disposed on top of another to provide a complex, programmable coating. 26. The article of claim 1 , wherein the article is selected from the group consisting of containers, medical devices, medical implants, gloves, membranes, filters, pipes, tubing, wires, construction materials, road signs, marine structures, and vehicles. 27. The article of claim 1 , wherein the lubricating liquid further comprises a fluorinated lubricant. 28. The article of claim 1 , wherein said polymer includes polyethylene glycol, silicones with vinyl groups, silanes with vinyl groups, silicones with hydrogen groups, silanes with hydrogen groups, or silicones with hydroxyl groups. 29. The article of claim 1 , wherein said polymer includes polyalkyleneglycols, perfluoroalkyl groups or perfluoropolyether groups. 30. The article of claim 1 , wherein said polymer includes phenyl groups or halide groups. 31. The article of claim 1 , wherein said polymer includes polyethylene glycol, silicones with vinyl groups, silanes with vinyl groups, silicones with hydrogen groups, silanes with hydrogen groups, or silicones with hydroxyl groups, polyalkyleneglycols, perfluoroalkyl groups or perfluoropolyether groups, phenyl groups or halide groups. 32. The article of claim 1 , wherein said polymer includes one or more polymers identified in Table 1. 33. The article of claim 1 , wherein said polymer includes one or more

Assignees

Inventors

Classifications

  • Dendritic macromolecules · CPC title

  • Rubbers · CPC title

  • as part of a multilayer system · CPC title

  • to obtain an anti-friction or anti-adhesive surface (rendering particulate materials free-flowing in general, e.g. making them hydrophobic B01J2/30) · CPC title

  • C09D5/1675Primary

    Polyorganosiloxane-containing compositions · CPC title

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Frequently asked questions

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What does patent US9963597B2 cover?
The present disclosure describes a strategy to create self-healing, slippery self-lubricating polymers. Lubricating liquids with affinities to polymers can be utilized to get absorbed within the polymer and form a lubricant layer (of the lubricating liquid) on the polymer. The lubricant layer can repel a wide range of materials, including simple and complex fluids (water, hydrocarbons, crude oi…
Who is the assignee on this patent?
Harvard College
What technology area does this patent fall under?
Primary CPC classification C09D5/1675. Mapped technology areas include Chemistry & Metallurgy.
When was this patent published?
Publication date Tue May 08 2018 00:00:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) (B2). Legal status and post-grant events are not shown on this page.
What related patents are in patentsdb?
We list 8 related publications on this page (citations in our corpus or others sharing the same primary CPC).